Top 12 All-Time Most Cerebral Boxers

It takes more than strength, punching power and great conditioning to become a champion prizefighter. Mastery of footwork, angles, feinting, defense and the ability to adapt to an opponent’s tactics are all at least as crucial to ring success as knowing how to throw a good left hook. Every champion boxer utilizes such elements to some degree, but then there are the genuine scholars of ring craft, the most cerebral boxers, who devote themselves to becoming true maestros of the technical aspects of fisticuffs. Here, with the help of Lee Wylie, we list the most cunning and intelligent of them all, the sweetest scientists of “The Sweet Science.”

12. Kid McCoy: The “Real McCoy” invented the corkscrew punch, designed to both penetrate specific guards and tear an opponent’s skin. He was considered the ultimate opportunist, an inventive trickster who did not hesitate to indulge in outlandish tactics to gain an advantage, such as feigning illness or pointing to someone in the crowd.

11. Tommy Loughran: The owner of arguably the most cultured lead hand in boxing history, Loughran was masterful at controlling distance and was one of the best defensive fighters to ever step through the ropes. His intelligence was by far his greatest attribute and enabled him to compete with such legends as Gene Tunney, Harry Greb and Mickey Walker.

Tommy Loughran, circa 1926.

10. George Dixon: The first black man to win a world title and inventor of the practice of shadow boxing, “Little Chocolate” is arguably the sport’s first true master. Hailed during his career as the finest boxer of all time, Dixon was a master of feinting and a true innovator both in terms of tactics and training methods. His techniques greatly influenced those who came after him, including Joe Gans and Jack Johnson.

9. James Corbett: In terms of technique, Corbett was one of the great pioneers as he emphasized footwork, lateral movement and effective use of the jab. His win over John L. Sullivan in 1892 marked a great victory for brains over brawn and a turning point for the sport. One can argue that Corbett is the godfather of modern boxing principles.

Fitzsimmons and Corbett mix it up in their historic 1897 encounter.

8. Holman Williams: A major influence on the great Joe Louis, Williams was both one of the sharpest and cleverest boxers of his time and one of the most avoided. Legendary trainer Eddie Futch claimed Williams was the best pure boxer he ever saw and that he’d rather watch Williams shadowbox than most other pugilists actually fight.

7. Bernard Hopkins: For Bernard, a master of psychological pressure, the fight begins long before the opening bell, but once in the ring he proved himself both a defensive wizard and a master at compelling opponents to fight his fight. Like Archie Moore, Hopkins’ amazing longevity is a direct result of his intellectual approach to the sport.

Hopkins’ longevity is all about his brain power.

6. Jim Driscoll: During his lifetime there were many who regarded “Peerless” Jim as the greatest boxer who had ever lived, such was his mastery of the squared circle. Considering he held wins over fellow luminaries George Dixon and Abe Atell, this judgment cannot be dismissed as mere hyperbole. Driscoll went on to write four books on boxing technique — The Textbook of Boxing, Out-Fighting, Ring Craft and The Straight Left — and they remain among the most detailed treatises ever written on The Sweet Science. His ideas have influenced countless boxers and even elite martial artists such as Bruce Lee.

5. Bob Fitzsimmons: “Speckled Bob” is known for being both boxing’s first triple-crown champion and one of its hardest punchers. What is lesser known is that much of Fitzsimmons success stemmed from some highly sophisticated ring technique. Timing, distance and footwork were as much his stock-in-trade as raw power and his influence on fellow masters Joe Gans and Kid McCoy is irrefutable.

Bob Fitzsimmons

4. Archie Moore: No boxer has scored more knockouts than “The Old Mongoose” and likely no one ever will. But like Fitzsimmons, such success had as much to do with mastery of ring technique and strategy as it did mere aggression or brute strength. Moore was skilled in the art of drawing leads and his combination punching was superb, as was his counter-punching. His longevity at the top level can be attributed almost entirely to ring savvy. As adversary Yvon Durelle put it: “I have fought smart men before, but never anyone as smart as that fellow.”

Archie Moore. Ink drawing by Damien Burton.

3. Willie Pep: The “Will o’ the Wisp” was a master of angles, movement and creating traps for the unwary. To watch Willie Pep in action is to witness a dissertation on how to set up an opponent: faking to circle out to his left but instead coming back with a straight left from the southpaw stance. Or playing with distance by forcing the opponent to over-commit and then walking them into shots. In fact, many of the tactics Floyd Mayweather Jr. used to dominate his era, Pep was employing even more authoritatively 75 years ago.

2. Joe Gans: Gans, the first black American to win a world title, was one of boxing’s first true masters and a unique talent in that he was equally proficient boxing from a distance or fighting on the inside. A pioneer of ring craft, he did not invent the left jab but he likely refined its use both as a defensive punch and as a distraction to disguise an attack. Historians do credit him with inventing the uppercut and popularizing the basic techniques of blocking, footwork and counter-punching and his prodigious skills earned him the nickname “The Old Master.” His influence is immense and was acknowledged by numerous later champions, including the great Benny Leonard.

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1. Benny Leonard: An immensely sophisticated boxer, Leonard reigned over probably the greatest lightweight division of all-time and it was ring smarts more than anything else which accounted for the success of “The Ghetto Wizard.” Such was Leonard’s mastery, he rarely lost a round in competition. An avid student of the game, he spent hours in the boxing clubs studying different moves and strategies, feints and shifts, and when he chose to share his insights all training in the gym came to a standstill. Ray Arcel unhesitatingly called Leonard the best boxer he ever saw, citing his ability to make his opponents do exactly what they didn’t want to do. “If you were a counter-puncher, he would make you lead,” said the legendary trainer. “If you were aggressive, he would make you back up.” Leonard’s “mental energy,” added Arcel, was simply “unsurpassed.”

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The Fight City

Montreal is The Fight City. Known in years past as "Sin City" and "Babylon on the St. Lawrence", it saw more than its share of ring legends over the decades. A metropolis where hundreds of young warriors train and battle each day in its many gyms, it is where Archie Moore, Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran and Bernard Hopkins all found greatness. It is a city of fights and fighters, of hockey and heroes, of broken dreams and immortal glory, a city unlike any other. Montreal is The Fight City.